← Career & Applications AI Powered Β· Free Β· No sign up

πŸ“‹ Resume / CV Builder

Generate a professional resume or academic CV tailored to your target role. Works for freshers and experienced researchers.

πŸ”’ Avoid pasting confidential or unpublished material. Privacy Policy
πŸ“‚ Have an existing CV or Resume?
Upload your PDF and choose what you'd like to do with it.
πŸ“‹
Drop your CV / Resume PDF here
PDF only Β· Max 10 MB
πŸ“‹
πŸ‘€ Personal Information
πŸŽ“ Education
πŸ”¬ Research / Work Experience
πŸ“š Publications & Presentations
⚑ Skills
🎯 Target Position
Generating your CV...
πŸ“‹ Your CV / Resume

Academic CV vs industry resume: key differences for researchers

An academic curriculum vitae (CV) and an industry resume serve different audiences with different expectations. An academic CV is comprehensive β€” it includes every publication, conference presentation, teaching position, grant, and service role, and can run to many pages. An industry resume is targeted and concise β€” typically one to two pages, focused on skills and impact rather than comprehensive record.

The academic CV

Standard sections: Education (reverse chronological), Research Experience, Publications (peer-reviewed, then preprints, then conference proceedings), Presentations, Teaching, Grants and Fellowships, Awards, Service. Use consistent formatting. Include DOIs for all publications. For publications, follow the citation format standard in your field exactly.

Converting to an industry resume

Cut the comprehensive publication list to your three to five most relevant papers with a link to your Google Scholar profile for the full list. Replace academic language with impact statements: not "conducted Western blot analysis" but "developed and optimised protein quantification assay, reducing assay time by 40%". Add a skills section with specific software, techniques, and equipment. Quantify achievements wherever possible.